CHINAMacroReporter

April 18, 2020
The Pandemic's Impact on Trade
‘There are some people who would say that there was already a retreat from globalization underway.’ ‘The tools of globalization - enormous reductions in the cost of transportation and communication - remain.’ ‘But the marginal utility actually of further advances is declining – that would be one way to put it.’
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April 11, 2020
The Pandemic May Increase China's Economic Strength vis-à-vis the U.S.
‘Well, I think people around the world are rightly suspicious of the Chinese as they are probably equally suspicious of the Americans.'
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April 30, 2018
'Big lessons from the faulty analysis that spiked the Shanghai stock market'
ProTips from Andrew Polk, Trivium China On April 24, equity analysts interpreted a phrase used in a Politburo meeting readout to signal a new round of economic stimulus. And, the Shanghai stock market, one of the world's worst performers, spiked 2%. On April 25, having much earlier advised and protected clients, Andrew Polk of Trivium China published an analysis in Trivium's daily (and free) Later, Andrew and I talked about how he reached his conclusions. His explanation is a masterclass in how experience, discipline, and some tedious slogging, combined with a sound analytical framework, lead to good China analysis.
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April 18, 2018
New super-agency, National Supervision Commission—and China's massive government restructuring
'With government restructuring, the biggest thing is the creation of an entirely new branch of government: the National Supervisory Commission. Its entire job is to overlook every single public official in China. It is an institutionalization and deepening of the corruption crackdown that we've seen over the past few years.'In all, Andrew highlighted four major actions from the Two Sessions: 1.Chinese government restructuring 2.The policy roadmap 3.Personnel 4.The legislative agenda + the constitutional amendments
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April 16, 2018
The Chinese Government’s 9 Economic Policy Priorities in 2018 (and beyond)
[China Econ Observer] 1.Supply-side Structural Reform 2.Innovation 3.The “three critical battles” 4.Deepening reforms 5.Rural revitalization 6.The regional development strategy 7.Increasing consumption and improving investment 8.Opening up 9.People’s wellbeing
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April 10, 2018
U.S.-China trade dispute: Will China Weaponize the RMB and U.S. Treasury bonds?
U.S.-China trade war: collateral damageConsider the soy bean. 'China is threatened retaliatory tariffs on U.S. soybeans. The U.S. is one of the largest producers of soybeans. If China's not going to buy them, we're going to have an excess capacity.'' So, last week, we saw a soybean selloff.''But there was a complete dislocation in whole soybean supply chains. Downstream products, like soybean oil, didn't move at all in the same way.'
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April 5, 2018
Behind the U.S.-China trade dispute: 'The West's China gamble has failed.'
What's the root cause of the current friction between the U.S. and China? The West's disappointment that China did follow the western model but its own, argues Ed Tse, CEO of Gao Feng Advisory Company (a member of the China Analyst Network). [Ed's solution] look to the similarities between China and the West, especially in the tech sector, and be alert to China's evolution toward better IPR, market access, and other contentious issues, not just the remaining shortcomings. Below is a video of my discussion with Ed and excerpts from both the interview and his South China Morning Post op-ed, 'Chinese innovation with US characteristics? Maybe China and the West aren’t that far apart, in business at least.' Ed presents insights that differ greatly from the China Echo Chamber in the U.S. Let me know what you think.
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March 8, 2018
How Trump's tariffs impact China's trade/currency relations with Japan & Korea
[China markets update with TRACK's Bob Savage] 'The currency markets are embroiled in trying to figure out whether the Trump tariffs on steel and aluminum are good or bad for the U.S. economy and the U.S. stock market.'
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March 6, 2018
'E-commerce' is rapidly evolving into 'New Retail.' Jack Ma, Alibaba
Ed Tse, founder of the Gao Feng consultancy and the leading expert on Chinese innovation, introduced me to New Retail in a recent conversation. You will find his explanation of New Retail below, along with a couple of videos showing New Retail in action - as amazing today as Minority Report seemed years ago. Perhaps even more amazing is the China business strategy, the 'Third Way,' that made things like New Retail possible. Ed explains the Third Way in Part Two of our discussion that I will be posting soon. Chinese do do things their own way, as the Third Way again demonstrates. For now, have a look at the future today. And, stay tuned for Part Two for Ed's explanation of the Third Way that made New Retail possible.
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March 1, 2018
'Trump's tariffs just first shot—the big China action is Section 301'
Leland points out that President Trump's really big trade move against China yet to come, that is, Section 301 penalties. If you aren't up to speed on 301, you will be after you read and watch Leland's comments. As Leland says, with Section 301, 'regardless of how Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs end up in the next few days - you're seeing the beginning, not the end, of Trump's aggressiveness on trade.' 'And, I don't think people have prepared themselves yet for the fact that 301 is coming.'
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February 22, 2018
A world of debt mortgages our economic future
Irresponsible borrowing by the US, China and India imperils global growth: What is not natural is China’s bad track record on debt: according to the Bank of International Settlements, every measure of debt — consumer, government and corporate — has risen as a share of GDP for the past decade. China went from a low-leverage country in 2007 to having a worse debt position than the US in 2017, despite the fact that the US itself has borrowed heavily.
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February 16, 2018
China's Crisis of Success
Here are five key points, each corresponding to a section below. "The Rise of China: How Economic Reform Is Creating a New Superpower" by Bill Overholt, published in 1993, was called 'nonsense' and 'too optimistic.' How did that work out for the reviewers? Now, almost three decades after "The Rise of China", Bill believes that China's future has become 'much more uncertain.'
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February 12, 2018
2017 China Property Report
One of the highlights in our recent 'In Pursuit of Patterns' series of client notes, showed that the land sales growth had tended to lead the price growth and a significant increase in land sales would lead, with a lag, to the subsequent correction in prices.
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February 9, 2018
The extraordinary power of China's corporate 'mega ecosystems'
Besides Alibaba and Tencent, companies like Ping An Insurance Group, Baidu and JD.com are building out mega ecosystems with incredible speed and intensity. Even some traditional manufacturers are moving in this direction. Zhejiang Geely Holding Group has gone from producing entry-level cars to selling premium models with the help of foreign acquisitions and has been the first Chinese carmaker to move into on-demand mobility services. It has also been experimenting with connected intelligent vehicles, shared ownership programs and flying cars, together assembling a sprawling transportation services ecosystem.
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February 8, 2018
China's trade surplus up, RMB weaker
[China markets update with TRACK's Bob Savage ] 'The RMB did not like the trade data at all, and it weakened immediately - over 1% today.' 'Overnight, the world has moved a little bit away from its U.S.-centric obsession about equity volatility in the United States and around the world to what's going on in China,' says Bob Savage, CEO of TRACK and member of the soon-to-be-launched China Analyst Network.
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February 7, 2018
What we import from China
But he can’t keep saying China is ripping us off and he’s going to stop it unless the US targets the biggest imports. The trade deficit with China is bigger than with the next eight countries combined. NAFTA? The trade deficit in cell phones and computers alone with China is bigger than the trade deficits for all goods with Mexico and Canada combined.
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February 3, 2018
China's RMB oil futures exchange—the 'story of the year'!
‍The Shanghai International Energy Exchange:blowing up more than oil : There's a lot to follow in China. And, I had missed reports about the opening of the Shanghai International Energy Exchange or INE, likely this quarter. But, during my interview with Bob Savage, the well-respected analyst of global markets and CEO of TRACK, he told me the INE could be the 'story of the year.' That's a big - and interesting - claim about something that seems like one more ho-hum Chinese entity. Bob explained that the INE will create the an RMB-denominated oil futures contract. The first such contract in a petrodollar world, where China is largest crude oil importer. If RMB oil contracts - even just for trade with China - catch on, then the whole global oil trading regime will change. And, given the massive size of the global oil trade, a shift from dollars to RMBs will both erode the dollar as a reserve currency, and push the RMB closer its goal of becoming a full reserve currency.
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January 10, 2018
'China goes private'—from financial reform to the Belt Road Initiative
[Malcolm Riddell's conversation with Harvard's Tony Saich] The State & Party's technical prowess is somewhat limited.
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January 10, 2018
What Hiring Activity Says About Firm Valuations in China
How does an obscure factor like hiring practices impact firm valuation? That was the question posed by Deutsche Bank’s quant strategy group in a 2015 whitepaper titled, “Macro and Micro Jobenomics.” The report concluded that online job postings could be used to predict U.S. macroeconomic statistics and equity market returns. This piqued my interest – I wondered whether a similar process could be used for valuing A-share companies in China.
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December 31, 2017
December 2017: Is China Actually Deleveraging? Yes and No.
China Deleveraging Insider tracks the status of China’s financial de-risking initiatives and the state of deleveraging.The most recent data from the PBoC and the CBRC show that bank asset growth hit a fresh all-time low in October. That means China is actually deleveraging – a little. It’s slow and slight, and done with a bit of trickery, but the debt load has shrunk in comparison to the size of the economy.
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December 18, 2017
What are the policy implications for China's economy from the 19th Party Congress?'
Pieter Bottelier—top China economist, former World Bank head in China, and stalwart CHINADebate expert—set the theme today: the crucial albeit unsung importance of elite technocrats in guiding China's Economic Miracle.
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November 27, 2017
Is China's Economic Power a Paper Tiger?
The People’s Republic of China has surely seen faster GDP growth than the United States for most of the past forty years. It's the value of that growth that's questionable. : The Chinese economy is strange in many ways. Not only is it a hybrid between private capital and state control, but very few people directly invest in the mainland — and yet everybody is interested in how the second largest economy in the world is going to develop. That’s because Chinese demand determines the prices of world commodities, and the operations of multinational companies in China impact earnings. When the yuan falls, markets across the world get jittery. China watchers accept the fact that official Chinese data is severely flawed, and often simply fabricated, yet they still use it to analyze the Chinese economy and markets because there are few alternatives. One alternative, however, is the China Beige Book International (CBB), a research service that interviews thousands of companies and hundreds of bankers on the ground in China each quarter. They collect data and perform in-depth interviews with Chinese executives.
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November 22, 2017
Will Chinese Commodities Derail The Global Reflation Trade?
[Leland Miller and Derek Scissors on why investor excitement over Chinese capacity cuts this winter is oversold, and the serious implications for the global reflation trade.] For over a year, commodities bulls have feasted on China. In the aftermath of the recent Communist Party Congress, many investors are now drooling over the prospect the boom will continue, based on Beijing’s promises to supercharge its campaigns against overcapacity and pollution this winter. If such pledges are fulfilled, the thinking goes, substantial chunks of steel, aluminum, and other refining capacity will be taken offline, rebalancing markets and providing rocket fuel to already frothy prices. 2018 could prove to be an even more amped-up version of 2017.
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November 8, 2017
Novel Data on China's Auto Loans - An Inefficient Market
The continued growth of China’s auto sales has relied increasingly on consumer credit, according to the WSJ; but, granular data is hard to come by. So, we created a process to collect, clean, and structure data from online auto loan offerings. Our findings imply that the auto loan market, like many credit markets in China, runs on two parallel tracks, and is woefully inefficient.
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October 19, 2017
'Inside China’s quest to become the global leader in AI'
'The RMB did not like the trade data at all, and it weakened immediately - over 1% today.' 'Overnight, the world has moved a little bit away from its U.S.-centric obsession about equity volatility in the United States and around the world to what's going on in China,' says Bob Savage, CEO of TRACK and member of the soon-to-be-launched China Analyst Network.
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October 11, 2017
Novel Data on China's Mortgage Loans
China’s banks are directed by the state, without irony, to “vigorously promote reasonable home ownership.” Their most recent annual reports repeatedly bury in the notes this line, or some variant of it, as an explanation for the explosion of mortgage lending over the previous 12 months. Granular mortgage data however, is hard to come by – so we created a process to collect, clean, and interpret that information.
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September 12, 2017
China’s property market risks are rising, says data expert
Price trends in China’s housing market are unsustainable, according to Real Estate Foresight chief executive Robert Ciemniak who worries that excessive leverage among homeowners could lead to a crisis. Real Estate Foresight founder and chief executive Robert Ciemniak has made it his business to gather and interpret real time data on China’s residential property market. He gives his thoughts on what’s to come in China’s housing market.
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September 1, 2017
The father of business consulting in China knows why eBay failed there
In the early 1990s, when China was still struggling to shrug off the straightjacket of its planned economy, the man appointed to lead the first business consulting firm allowed in the nation was immediately confronted with the scope of the challenge ahead.
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August 30, 2017
Is china prematurely declaring victory in its reforms?
At the heart of China's economic take-off during the last four decades is a fragile equilibrium between economic reforms and one­ party rule. The communist party has demonstrated pragmatism and adaptability - but just at a time when China seeks to fully enter the knowledge economy and participate in global markets, it has put the brake on further reforms.
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August 29, 2017
China's unsolved liquidity risk
The question we should ask ourselves is, how many of China’s corporate borrowers are paying off existing debt with new debt?
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August 22, 2017
Predicting Chinese stock returns
[The Largest Single—Factor Study of China’s Stock Markets] Outside observers paint China’s stock markets as a casino, where picking stocks requires as much skill as roulette, and investors avoid the country in their portfolio allocations. Patterns exist, however, if you know where to look.
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August 2, 2017
Leland Miller on Pressing China Issues
Leland Miller, the founder of China Beige Book, spoke with The Epoch Times about which investors and companies are interested in China, the latest developments in the currency, U.S.-China relations, overcapacity problems, and the One Belt One Road Initiative. : The Chinese economy is strange in many ways. Not only is it a hybrid between private capital and state control, but very few people directly invest in the mainland — and yet everybody is interested in how the second largest economy in the world is going to develop. That’s because Chinese demand determines the prices of world commodities, and the operations of multinational companies in China impact earnings. When the yuan falls, markets across the world get jittery. China watchers accept the fact that official Chinese data is severely flawed, and often simply fabricated, yet they still use it to analyze the Chinese economy and markets because there are few alternatives. One alternative, however, is the China Beige Book International (CBB), a research service that interviews thousands of companies and hundreds of bankers on the ground in China each quarter. They collect data and perform in-depth interviews with Chinese executives.
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July 19, 2017
China Cause America's Trade Problems?
[Malcolm Riddell's conversation with Yukon Huang] 'America's trade problems are not the consequence of China's policies.'
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July 19, 2017
Siri: 'Can The iPhone Prove President Trump's Wrong About U.S.-China Trade?'
[Malcolm Riddell's conversation with Yukon Huang] 'America's trade problems are not the consequence of China's policies.' 'How much of that $650 iPhone - which adds to China's trade surplus with the U.S. - actually originates and stays in China? — Only $25.'
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July 2, 2017
China Doesn’t Have A Real Estate Bubble.
Prices spike in a city. The government puts the screws on the market, and prices go down. Investment then switches to a city with lax policies. Housing prices spike; regulations tighten; prices go down. Investors move on. And so on, and so on.
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June 28, 2017
Will 'One Belt, One Road' Tank China's Economy?
'My fear is that Xi will see this initiative as an alternative to economic reform.'— Pieter Bottelier : But, the biggest threat in the near term is that Xi Jinping will see OBOR as an alternative to completing the economic reforms promised - but not delivered - in 2013's Third Plenum.
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June 21, 2017
China's stock markets—are there any patterns?
'I find evidence for dramatic size and momentum effects; that is, small stocks and recent winners are the top performers in China’s stock market. Additionally, I find that high-beta stocks modestly underperform low-beta stocks.'
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June 7, 2017
China's higher rates don't matter, yet
In fact, high yields still haven’t filtered down to borrowers. Using industrial enterprise economic indicators data, I estimated the actual interest rate paid by Chinese borrowers. Over the past six months – as corporate bond yields, SHIBOR, and WMP yields all rose dramatically – the actual interest paid by China’s industrial enterprises fell to an all-time low.
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May 29, 2017
Why A Trump–Kim Jeong Eun Summit Could Work
[Malcolm Riddell's conversation with Bill Overholt] 'If it would be appropriate for me to meet with him [Kim Jong-un], I would absolutely. I would be honored to do it.' — President Trump — May 2017:'What President Trump has done is to signal we are willing to move away from this formula that the North Koreans have to give up everything in their nuclear program before negotiations - only then we'll talk with them. I admire our U.S. negotiators, but that formula is simply absurd.'
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May 17, 2017
A new framework for china's debt problem
In fact, high yields still haven’t filtered down to borrowers. Using industrial enterprise economic indicators data, I estimated the actual interest rate paid by Chinese borrowers. Over the past six months – as corporate bond yields, SHIBOR, and WMP yields all rose dramatically – the actual interest paid by China’s industrial enterprises fell to an all-time low.
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May 3, 2017
An inflection point in china's systemic risk
Additionally, given the incentives of regulated institutions everywhere, it is likely that risks have simply begun to migrate to new and more opaque parts of the balance sheet. As China watchers, we should prepare for yet another game of financial risk whack-a-mole.
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April 26, 2017
Clearing up a few misconceptions on China's capital flight
Last year, I debunked a popular measure of trade misinvoicing as the culprit for China’s capital outflows. Today, let’s scrutinize two other misconceptions bouncing around the China commentator echo chamber.
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March 9, 2017
So many twists and turns to the China Housing markets story
[CHINADebate Presentation] One of the highlights in our recent 'In Pursuit of Patterns' series of client notes, showed that the land sales growth had tended to lead the price growth and a significant increase in land sales would lead, with a lag, to the subsequent correction in prices.—Almost everyone on the outside seems to have missed the biggest bull market in China housing in 2016, culminating in policy tightening cycle kicking in at the end of the year. But what's next?
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February 27, 2017
Is The U.S. Ceding Global Leadership To China?
'China isn't positioned to replace the U.S. as a global leader anytime soon.'—Hard on President Trump's 'American First' inaugural address, Xi Jinping gave a rousing paean to globalism at the World Economic Forum. And, immediately the hot question became: 'Is the U.S. ceding global leadership to China?' Yes and no, says Bill Overholt of the Harvard Asia Center. Yes, the U.S. is ceding global leadership. No, China won’t replace the U.S. What will replace the U.S. is ‘G-Zero’, a world with no single global leader. Not China, not the U.S. So, can his critics lay this outcome at President Trump’s feet?
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February 15, 2017
C-to-C Internet Commerce- From Taobao Shops to Taobao Villages
One is some of the local government-owned SOEs are the sources for overcapacity. The reason is because the local government also wants to ensure there's some degree of employment locally, and perhaps some source of taxation. The Chinese government is now going to need to start the so-called supply-side economics to try to consolidate overcapacity in a number of sectors. It's going to impinge on the interests of many of these local SOEs as well as the local governments who own them.
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February 15, 2017
How SOEs & Local Governments Create Overcapacity
One is some of the local government-owned SOEs are the sources for overcapacity. The reason is because the local government also wants to ensure there's some degree of employment locally, and perhaps some source of taxation. The Chinese government is now going to need to start the so-called supply-side economics to try to consolidate overcapacity in a number of sectors. It's going to impinge on the interests of many of these local SOEs as well as the local governments who own them.
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February 15, 2017
Why SOE Reform is So Tough
'...SOEs need to reform, because on one hand, many of them have achieved a lot for China. On the other hand, they've actually created quite a lot of harm, in particular in the areas of overcapacity but also in the areas of corruption we've talked about.'
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February 2, 2017
AmCham China Chairmen's View From China in D.C. 2017
[AmCham China & CHINADebate U.S.—China Trade/Business Series 2017] Terrific insights from leaders on the ground in China. While in D.C. the Chairmen joined us in a panel discussion and individual interviews about U.S. business in China, U.S.-China relations, trade, and much more. We present their views in a 13 part series. Sheryl WuDunn, business executive, lecturer, best-selling author, and winner of the Pulitzer Prize moderated.
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February 1, 2017
'Chinese Politics In The Xi Jinping Era'
[Malcolm Riddell Interviewed Cheng Li] 'If you ask any taxi driver in Beijing, Shanghai, or Guangzhou, he or she will tell you – with accuracy – which leader belongs to which faction. : 'China is a one–party state, but that does not necessarily mean Chinese leadership is a monolithic group with leaders who have the same ideas, same background, same world views, same politics. No, they're divided.'
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December 7, 2016
First 100 Days: Do Not Provoke China
The First 100 Days interview series features Pacific Council experts addressing the top foreign policy issues facing the incoming Trump administration.: Warns of the potential for new conflicts if Donald Trump follows through with his campaign promises regarding China.
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October 18, 2016
How Alibaba, Xiaomi, & Tencent are Changing the Rules of Business
[An Interview of Ed Tse, the author of 'China's Disruptors: Alibaba, Xiaomi, & Tencent... how innovative 'Disruptor' companies are restructuring China's economy.' ] The real force in Chinese economy is increasingly private companies, not SOEs. / Leading private Chinese companies are innovative and ambitious
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July 14, 2016
How 'Brexit' Will Impact China's Economy
David Dollar gives you fresh insights to better incorporate Brexit's impact into your analyses of China and global economies & markets, including: 1. Why, after the Brexit vote, did the Shanghai Stock Market fall only 1%? 2. How will Brexit affect the value of the RMB and China's currency policy? 3. How will Brexit impact trade with the EU, China’s largest trading partner? 4. Why, in the larger geopolitical perspective, could China be the big winner from Brexit?
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July 2, 2016
China housing: boom, bust, or bubble-or...?
100s of Cities Bubble Up & Down As Policy Makers Press the Levers China hasn’t collapsed. And, the bubble hasn’t burst because there may not be just one big real estate bubble. Instead, there are 100s of sizable cities, each moving in its own cycle, each responding to how its local policymakers stimulate & tighten-stimulate & tighten, and each having performance divergent from that of other cities. Watch here to see how city-level markets bubble up and bubble down...
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Xi Jinping: 'Change unseen for a 100 years is coming.'

Time went of joint in the mid-1800s when China began its ‘Century of Humiliation.’ And Mr. Xi, with a sense of destiny, seems to feel he was born to set it right. (I very much doubt that Mr. Xi would add: ‘O cursed spite’ – he seems to relish his role and the shot it gives him to go down in history as China’s greatest ruler.)
by

Malcolm Riddell

|

CHINADebate

April 2, 2023
Xi Jinping: 'Change unseen for a 100 years is coming.'

Sorry about the long absence.

  • My back was giving me a heck of a time – but better now. Great to be back.
  • Thanks to all of you who inquired about my absence.

Away from being on the computer every day, I had more time to muse about China.

  • And about Xi Jinping.

I’ll cover three of those musings today.

  1. Mr. Xi has global ambitions but scant resources to achieve them; he may be counting on his worldview, ‘the East is rising, the West is declining,’ to compensate for the resources he lacks.
  2. Mr. Xi is an autocrat, not just because he hails from a Leninist party, but because autocracy has been in the Chinese political DNA for more than 2,000 years; faced with foreign challenges to autocracy Chinese emperors never faced, he is working to make the ‘world safe for autocracy’ - especially China's.
  3. Mr. Xi is painfully aware of China’s frustration and prior humiliation at the hands of the West and Japan and sees himself as the restorer of the Middle Kingdom, putting China again atop the world order.

PART ONE | XI JINPING’S GLOBAL AMBITIONS & RESOURCES


[.cmrred]1 | ‘Change unseen in 100 years is coming.’
Among the many events during my absence, I was struck by Mr. Xi’s comment as he was leaving Moscow after his 40th meeting with Vladimir Putin:

  • ‘Change is coming that hasn’t happened in 100 years. And we’re driving this change together.’

What change does Mr. Xi have in mind?

  • A broad outline can be found in the March 30 speech on EU-China relations by EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
  • Besides defining the change, she presented the most concise – and in my view, most clear-eyed – assessment of China and its objectives and actions. I cannot encourage you more to read it.
  • She noted, as I did above:

‘Most telling were President Xi's parting words to Putin on the steps outside the Kremlin when he said:’

  • ‘Right now, there are changes, the likes of which we have not seen for 100 years. And we are the ones driving these changes together.'

Throughout her speech, she outlined what change Mr. Xi seeks to accomplish and how:

1. ‘We heard that last October when President Xi told the Communist Party Congress that by 2049 he wanted China to become a world leader in ‘composite national strength and international influence'.’

  • ‘Or to put it in simpler terms: He essentially wants China to become the world's most powerful nation.’

2. ‘In his report to the recent Party Congress, President Xi told the Chinese people to prepare for struggle.’

  • ‘It is no coincidence that he used in his opening speech the words ‘douzheng' and ‘fendou' repeatedly – which both can be translated as struggle.’

‘This is indicative of a world view shaped by a sense of mission for the Chinese nation.’

3. ‘[T]he Chinese Communist Party's clear goal is a systemic change of the international order with China at its centre.’

  • ‘We have seen it with China's positions in multilateral bodies which show its determination to promote an alternative vision of the world order.’
  • ‘One, where individual rights are subordinated to national security.’
  • ‘Where security and economy take prominence over political and civil rights.’


[.cmrred]2 | But will they have China’s back in a fight?
Do Mr. Xi and Mr. Putin and their friends have the economic, political, and military firepower to drive such change against the array of advanced democracies?

  • Doubtful.

No doubt Mr. Xi has thrown in with Mr. Putin for the long run.

  • But, given the showing in Ukraine, Russia is proving to be, as someone put it, ‘a gas station with nukes’ – still, we can’t ignore the nukes.

Mr. Xi has one ally, North Korea, and a number of friends, including Russia, Iran, Pakistan, and others.

  • Even accounting for China’s economic and growing military might, taken together, Mr. Xi and his friends are no match for the U.S. and its array of allies: NATO, Japan, Korea, and Australia, along with other nations fearful of China’s aggression.
  • If it came to a fight, I ask myself, how many of Mr. Xi’s friends would join him versus how of the U.S. allies would join America – and if all of Mr. Xi's did, would it make a difference?


[.cmrred]3 | Marxist history to the rescue
Given this relative weakness, Mr. Xi, as a dedicated Marxist, may be counting on history to make up the difference.

  • Ever since the Bolsheviks succeeded in Russia (and before, in theory), Marxists have had faith that capitalism will author its own demise – and they are still waiting.

Corollary to this is Mr. Xi’s faith - against all evidence – expressed in his oft-repeated slogan:

  • ‘The East is rising, and the West is declining.’

As Peking University’s Wang Jisi notes in  ‘Wang Jisi: Has America declined? Chinese people should have a clear understanding’ [‘王缉思: 美国到底有没有衰落? 中国人应有清醒认识’]:

  • ‘Chairman Mao emphasized in 1957 that “the east wind overcomes the west wind”. At that time, China’s view was “the enemy is declining day by day, and we are getting better day by day”.’
  • ‘Now we say, “the East is rising, and the West is falling,” which is from the same lineage.’

Speaking of Mao, this reminds me of the song, a paeon to the Chairman and often referred to as China’s unofficial national anthem, ‘The East is Red,’ which begins:

  • ‘The east is red, the sun is rising.’

The song is aspirational.

  • The East was not Red when the current lyrics were first heard in 1942.
  • And, with a couple of exceptions, it is not Red today.

Likewise, the idea of rise and decline goes back to Mao.

  • Just as Mao got it wrong, so has Mr. Xi.

For Mr. Xi, ‘The east is rising, and the west is declining’ encapsulates a two-prong approach to that will allow him to make change not seen 100 years. If this is broadly right, he is basing his success on two faulty premises –

  1. The East is rising.
  2. The West is declining.

Taking the second prong - ‘the West is declining’ - first, I couldn’t disagree more.

‘The story­line is the same.’

  • ‘The United States is slowly losing its commanding position in the global distribution of power.’
  • ‘The East now rivals the West in economic might and geopolitical heft, and countries in the global South are growing quickly and taking a larger role on the international stage.’

‘But in truth, the United States is not foundering.’

  • ‘The stark narrative of decline ignores deeper world-historical influences and circumstances that will continue to make the United States the dominant presence and organizer of world politics in the twenty-first century.’
  • ‘The deep sources of American power and influence in the world persist.’

As for the second prong – ‘the East is rising’ – I couldn’t agree more. But why Mr. Xi is encouraged by this is beyond me.

  • The East is rising, all right – rising against China.

In the lead to his essay, ‘How China Lost Asia,’ former South Korean foreign minister, Yoon Young-Kwan, notes:

  • ‘China’s efforts to bully its neighbors into acquiescing to its demands and preferences have failed.’
  • ‘They have led Asia's democracies to deepen security cooperation with the United States.’

This East is rising, but it’s rising in tacit or direct opposition to China – from just plain fear generated by Mr. Xi himself. As a result,

  • Japan is toughening its defenses; Australia’s formally put in with the U.S. and the UK; the Philippines is granting the U.S. more bases; even South Korea and Japan are trying to reconcile in a ‘the enemy of my enemy is my friend’ sort of way - and much more.

A rising East is an obstacle, not an asset, in attaining the change Mr. Xi aspires to make.

  • If the East had become Red, China would no doubt have a slew of Asian comrade nations allies. But it didn’t, and he doesn’t.

The East is not rising (at least not in the way Mr. Xi wishes), and the West is not declining.

  • If Mr. Xi is indeed waiting for a Marxist history to vindicate his vision and deliver change unseen in 100 years, he will have a long wait – history is not coming.

PART TWO | XI JINPING, AUTOCRAT

Xi Jinping, autocrat and friend of autocrats.

  • His reported mission: Make the world safe for autocracy.
  • Foe of Joe Biden in Mr. Biden’s Manichean struggle between democracy and autocracy.

There are upstart autocrats who gain power through revolution, coups, subverting democracies, and the like.

  • Not Mr. Xi.

He is an autocrat, first, as a believer in the Leninist Chinese Communist Party doctrine.

  • And second, as heir to a 2,000-year-old tradition of autocracy - since the Qin Dynasty, 221 B.C., China has had, with few exceptions, a top-down government, headed by a supreme leader, and governed by an all-encompassing bureaucracy.


[.cmrred]1 | The latest in a long line of Chinese autocrats
Decades ago, I read an essay by John King Fairbank that posited that the Chinese Communist Party was really just the latest Chinese dynasty. While I can’t put my hands on the essay, I found the same idea in Dr. Fairbank’s 1989 essay, ‘Keeping up with the New China’:

  • ‘The Chinese Communist party dictatorship is historically the successor to two thousand years of sweet-talking despotism by dynastic ruling families.’

More from Dr. Fairbank in his 1989 ‘Why China’s Rulers Fear Democracy’:

  • ‘In the twentieth century the institutional successor to family dynasties proved to be Party dictatorship, first as attempted rather loosely under Chiang Kai-shek and the Kuomintang and second as achieved more tightly under Mao Zedong and the CCP.’

And Dr. Fairbank again from ‘From the Ming to Deng Xiaoping’:

  • ‘The imperial autocracy, an institution persisting through the Ming, Ch’ing, Republican, and People’s Republic eras….’

‘This autocracy as a point of Chinese cultural distinctiveness is of course surrounded by a host of interconnected characteristics of social structure and values—like the bureaucrat’s need for a superior authority, the patriot’s search for a personal object of loyalty, or the common people’s acquiescence in the ruler’s violence in support of order.’

  • ‘China’s culture of today, despite the inflow of foreign influences, retains its identifiable shape and interacting elements.’

Making Xi Jinping the latest in a long line of autocrats - and proud of it.


[.cmrred]2 | ‘Making the world safe for autocracy’
Mr. Xi seems increasingly like an autocrat in the imperial mode (without familial succession)

  • But unlike the time when an emperor ruled over the Middle Kingdom, he is faced with adversaries who challenge his autocracy, and he is acting to counter them.

Michael Beckley and Hal Brands highlight both in their essay, ‘China’s Threat to Global Democracy.’

  • For the Chinese Communist Party, ‘autocracy is not simply a means of political control or a ticket to self-enrichment.'
  • It is ‘a set of deeply held ideas about the proper relationship between rulers and the masses.’

‘This belief in the superiority of an autocratic Chinese model coexists with deep insecurity:’

  • ‘The PRC is a brutally illiberal regime in a world led by a liberal hegemon, a circumstance from which the CCP draws a sense of pervasive danger and a strong desire to refashion the world order so that the PRC’s particular form of government is not just protected but privileged.’

‘Chinese leaders feel a compulsion to make international norms and institutions friendlier to illiberal rule.’

  • ‘That is why a powerful but anxious Chinese regime is now engaged in an aggressive effort to make the world safe for autocracy and to corrupt and destabilize democracies.’

‘The rulers in Beijing feel that they must wrest international authority away from a democratic superpower with a long history of bringing autocracies to ruin.’

  • ‘And as an authoritarian China becomes powerful, it inevitably looks to strengthen the forces of illiberalism—and to weaken those of democracy—as a way to enhance its influence and bolster its own model.’

In a modern world where China has re-emerged with the power to try to reshape the international order, it makes sense that Mr. Xi would do what he can to make the world safe for China’s autocracy.

  • And to weaken the opponents who oppose him.

PART THREE | XI JINPING, RESTORER OF THE MIDDLE KINGDOM

Thinking of Xi Jinping, I think of two parts of a line from Hamlet:

  • ‘The time is out of joint,’ and
  • ‘I was born to set it right.’

Time went of joint in the mid-1800s when China began its ‘Century of Humiliation.’

  • And Mr. Xi, with a sense of destiny, seems to feel he was born to set it right.
  • (I very much doubt that Mr. Xi would add: ‘O cursed spite’ – he seems to relish his role and the shot it gives him to go down in history as China’s greatest ruler.)


[.cmrred]1 | ‘The time is out of joint.’
John King Fairbank wrote in his 1966 ‘New Thinking About China’:

  • ‘Down to the nineteenth century, China was its own world, an enormous, ancient, isolated, unified, and self-sufficient.’
  • ‘It preserved a continuity of development in the same area over some three or four thousand years, and had a strong tendency to look inward.’

‘China was the center of the known world and of civilization.’

  • ‘Non-Chinese were peripheral and inferior.’
  • ‘China was superior to all foreign regions.’

‘The disaster that hit China in the nineteenth century is one of the most comprehensive any people has ever experienced.’

  • ‘The ancient tradition of China’s superiority, plus this modern phase of disaster, undoubtedly produced one first-class case of frustration.’
  • ‘It could not seem right that a civilization once at the top should be brought so low.’

Mr. Xi seems to feel China’s humiliation and frustration in his bones.

  • All this is echoed in his overarching initiative: the China Dream.


[.cmrred]2 | ‘I was born to set it right.’
‘The CCP’s mandate is to set history aright by returning China to the top of the heap’ write Drs. Beckley and Brands.
‘In some ways, China’s bid for primacy in Asia and globally is a new chapter in the history’s oldest story.’

  • ‘As countries grow more powerful, they become more interested in reshaping the world.’
  • ‘Given how rapidly China’s power has increased over the past four decades, it would be very odd if Beijing was not asserting itself overseas.’

‘Yet China is moved by more than the cold logic of geopolitics.’

  • ‘It is also reaching for glory as a matter of historical destiny.’

‘China’s leaders view themselves as heirs to a Chinese state that was a superpower for most of recorded history.’

  • ‘A series of Chinese empires claimed “all under heaven” as their mandate and commanded deference from smaller states along the imperial periphery.’

‘In Beijing’s view, a U.S.-led world in which China is a second-tier power is not the historical norm but a profoundly galling exception.’

  • ‘That order was created after the Second World War, at the tail end of a “century of humiliation” during which rapacious foreign powers had plundered a divided China.’

Again from Dr. Fairbank:
‘The most remarkable thing about China’s political history is the early maturity of the socio-political order.’

  • ‘The ancient Chinese government became more sophisticated, at an earlier date, than any regime in the West.’
  • ‘Principles and methods worked out before the time of Christ held the Chinese empire together down to the twentieth century.’

‘The fact that this imperial system eventually grew out of date in comparison with the modern West should not obscure its earlier maturity.’

  • All what we might call the ‘institutional memory’ that Mr. Xi draws on today -

China is not groping to find its way or unsure of where it belongs – or doubtful about its role in shaping the world order.

  • And Mr. Xi believes he was born to set it right.